Of all the great things about television, the greatest is that it’s on every single day. TV history is being made, day in and day out, in ways big and small. In an effort to better appreciate this history, we’re taking a look back, every day, at one particular TV milestone.

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT: The sketches that Saturday Night Live brags about these days are usually the ones with political or social significance. Tina Fey returning to play Sarah Palin. Larry David doing “Bern Your Enthusiasm.” Those are great and fun. But sometimes the show goes alllllll the other way to the dumb end of the spectrum, and those moments can be genius too. Take, for example, the “Z-Shirt.”

Tim Robinson was only a cast member for one season before being sent back down to writer-only status. He generally didn’t get very much to do. “Z-Shirt” is the one glorious exception. For one thing, it’s an utterly pitch-perfect parody of high-energy ’90s ads targeted at kids. The products are utterly banal, but the attitude is through the roof. It’s very “Poochy the Dog,” actually. Robinson and the SNL directors nailed the energy and visual style perfectly. And on top of that, it was the single best use of Kevin Hart all episode, channelling his manic impish energy into a character who fit the style and let Robinson take the whole premise off the rails.

My sincere hope is that this becomes one of those sketches nobody talks about for five years or so until it surfaces like “Stevie Nicks’ Fajita Roundup” as a discovered classic. It even got a reprise later in the show: